Commands For Simulation Systems And Methods

ABSTRACT

Methods, systems, computer-readable media, and apparatuses for performing, providing, managing, executing, and/or running a distributed simulation are presented. In one or more embodiments, the distributed simulation may comprise a plurality of workers performing the simulation, and workers may send commands to other workers authoritative over entity components. A mapping of entity components to workers may be used to determine a bridge associated with a worker to which to send a command. A request to invoke the command may be transmitted to the worker via the bridge associated with the worker. The worker transmitting the command request may receive a response to the request to invoke the command, such as a success response or a failure response.

CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED CASES

This application claims priority to U.S. provisional application No. 62/592,465, filed Nov. 30, 2017, entitled “Commands for Simulation Systems and Methods,” by Matthew John Reveley Lewis et al. This application also claims priority to and is a continuation-in-part of U.S. application Ser. No. 16/008,125, filed Jun. 14, 2018, entitled “Simulation Systems and Methods,” which claims priority to and is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 15/361,874 (U.S. Pat. No. 10,025,892), filed Nov. 28, 2016, entitled “Simulation Systems and Methods,” which claims priority to U.S. provisional application No. 62/378,715, filed Aug. 24, 2016, entitled “Simulation Systems and Methods,” by Robert James Frederick Whitehead et al. Each of the prior applications is incorporated by reference herein in their entirety for all purposes.

FIELD

Aspects described herein generally relate to computers, networking, hardware, and software. More specifically, some aspects described herein relate to a networked system architecture for controlling a distributed and persistent computer-based simulation, including issuing and receiving commands in the simulation.

BACKGROUND

Conventional simulation systems are unable to scale to support very large numbers of objects to simulate those objects in real-time. Such systems have typically relied on a single instance of a simulation engine, running on a single physical or virtual computer system, to simulate the entire simulated world. Consumers of these simulation systems have had to choose between correctness, graphical fidelity, and real-time-interaction, with no solution offering the ability for all three on a large scale system. The magnitude and complexity of the situation is further increased if the consumer desires to simulate complex real-world problems which may require more computing power than a single simulation engine can provide. For example, a simulation of a city may require simulation of a large number of vehicles, pedestrians, bicyclists, traffic patterns, traffic lights, subway systems, transit vehicles, airplanes, and a multitude of other entities that affect and contribute to city life.

In one known approach, computing resources have been statically assigned to a portion of the simulated world. A disadvantage of this approach may be that as the simulated objects, actors, etc. move across the simulated world as the simulation progresses, the simulated objects may congregate on a very small region of the simulated world. If sufficient objects move to the very small region, the computing resources may be overloaded (resulting in slower processing), the simulation may terminate unexpectedly, and/or simulation data may be lost. Another disadvantage of this approach may be that state information of the simulation for a region may be concentrated on a single computing resource and may not be shared or spread across several resources, making fault tolerance or recovery from an unexpected termination difficult and time-consuming. In addition, this approach may not lend itself to easily support stateful migration of simulated objects across region boundaries, and thus simulations usually limit stateful migrations to only players.

These and other problems are addressed herein.

SUMMARY

The following presents a simplified summary of various aspects described herein. This summary is not an extensive overview, and is not intended to identify key or critical elements or to delineate the scope of the claims. The following summary merely presents some concepts in a simplified form as an introductory prelude to the more detailed description provided below.

To overcome limitations in the prior art described above, and to overcome other limitations that will be apparent upon reading and understanding the present specification, aspects described herein describe instantiating, on one or more computing devices, a plurality of workers associated with a computer-based simulation. Each worker of the plurality of workers may be authoritative over one or more entity components of a plurality of entity components associated with the computer-based simulation. Each worker of the plurality of workers may be associated with a bridge of a plurality of bridges. A first worker of the plurality of workers may determine a command for an entity component of the plurality of entity components, where a second worker of the plurality of workers may be authoritative over the entity component. The system may determine, based on a mapping of entity components to workers, a bridge associated with the second worker. The system may transmit, via a bridge associated with the first worker and via the bridge associated with the second worker, a request to invoke the command on the entity component. The first worker may receive, from the second worker and via the bridge associated with the second worker, a response to the request to invoke the command.

In some examples, the first worker of the plurality of workers may determine an identifier for the command for the entity component, and the request to invoke the command may comprise the identifier for the command and a payload for the command. The identifier for the command may comprise a first identifier for the command, and the bridge associated with the second worker may determine a second identifier for the command for the entity component. The second identifier may be different from the first identifier. Additionally or alternatively, receiving the response to the request to invoke the command may comprise receiving the second identifier for the command.

In some examples, after determining the command, the first worker may transmit, to the bridge associated with the first worker, a request to invoke the command on the entity component. The request to invoke the command transmitted to the bridge associated with the first worker may comprise an identifier for the entity component. Determining the bridge associated with the second worker may comprise determining, based on the identifier for the entity component and based on the mapping of entity components to workers, the bridge associated with the second worker. Additionally or alternatively, determining the bridge associated with the second worker may comprise transmitting, by the bridge associated with the first worker and to a resolver associated with the computer-based simulation, a lookup request comprising the identifier for the entity component. Determining the bridge associated with the second worker may also comprise receiving, by the bridge associated with the first worker, from the resolver, and based on transmitting the lookup request, an identifier for the bridge associated with the second worker. Transmitting the request to invoke the command on the entity component may comprise transmitting, by the bridge associated with the first worker and to the bridge associated with the second worker, the request to invoke the command on the entity component.

In some examples, methods described herein may comprise assigning authority over the entity component from the second worker to a third worker of the plurality of workers. The first worker may determine a second command for the entity component. Based on the mapping of entity components to workers, a bridge associated with the third worker may be determined. A request to invoke the second command on the entity component may be transmitted via the bridge associated with the third worker.

In some examples, the response to the request to invoke the command may comprise an indication that invocation of the command on the entity component failed. The response to the request to invoke the command may indicate one or more of a time out for the command, that the command was transmitted during an entity component authority handoff, or that a user-defined failure occurred.

In some examples, a computing device of the one or more computing devices may store, in a database associated with the computer-based simulation, the mapping of entity components to workers. Determining the bridge associated with the second worker may comprise determining, based on the mapping of entity components to workers stored in the database, the bridge associated with the second worker.

Systems and non-transitory computer readable media may be configured to provide and/or support various aspects described herein. These and additional aspects will be appreciated with the benefit of the disclosures discussed in further detail below.

It should be noted that any one or more of the above-described features may be used with any other feature or aspect in isolation or any combination. Features from one embodiment or aspect may be interchanged or used together with one or more features of any other described embodiment or aspect.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

A more complete understanding of aspects described herein and the advantages thereof may be acquired by referring to the following description in consideration of the accompanying drawings, in which like reference numbers indicate like features, and wherein:

FIG. 1 depicts an illustrative computer system architecture that may be used in accordance with one or more illustrative aspects described herein.

FIG. 2 depicts an illustrative virtualized (hypervisor) system architecture that may be used in accordance with one or more illustrative aspects described herein.

FIG. 3 depicts an illustrative cloud-based system architecture that may be used in accordance with one or more illustrative aspects described herein.

FIG. 4 depicts an illustrative entity architecture that may be used in accordance with one or more illustrative aspects described herein.

FIG. 5 depicts an illustrative component architecture that may be used in accordance with one or more illustrative aspects described herein.

FIG. 6 depicts an illustrative worker architecture that may be used in accordance with one or more illustrative aspects described herein.

FIG. 7 illustrates a flow chart of a method used to register a worker process according to one or more illustrative aspects described herein.

FIGS. 8A-8C depicts an illustrative spatially-optimized simulated world that may be used in accordance with one or more illustrative aspects described herein.

FIG. 9 depicts an example of worker interest regions in accordance with one or more example embodiments.

FIG. 10 depicts another example of worker interest regions in accordance with one or more example embodiments.

FIG. 11 depicts an illustrative high-level architecture that may be used in accordance with one or more illustrative aspects described herein.

FIG. 12 illustrates a flow chart of a method of transmitting and/or receiving commands according to one or more illustrative aspects described herein.

FIG. 13 illustrates another flow chart of a method of transmitting and/or receiving commands according to one or more illustrative aspects described herein.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

In the following description of the various embodiments, reference is made to the accompanying drawings identified above and which form a part hereof, and in which is shown by way of illustration various embodiments in which aspects described herein may be practiced. It is to be understood that other embodiments may be utilized and structural and functional modifications may be made without departing from the scope described herein. Various aspects are capable of other embodiments and of being practiced or being carried out in various different ways. Additionally, the phraseology and terminology used herein are for the purpose of description and should not be regarded as limiting. Rather, the phrases and terms used herein are to be given their broadest interpretation and meaning.

As will be appreciated by one of skill in the art upon reading the following disclosure, various aspects described herein may be embodied as a method, a computer system, or a computer program product. Accordingly, those aspects may take the form of an entirely hardware embodiment, an entirely software embodiment or an embodiment combining software and hardware aspects. Furthermore, such aspects may take the form of a computer program product stored by one or more computer-readable storage media having computer-readable program code, or instructions, embodied in or on the storage media. Any suitable computer-readable storage media may be utilized, including hard disks, CD-ROMs, optical storage devices, magnetic storage devices, and/or any combination thereof. Particular data structures may be used to more effectively implement one or more aspects described herein, and such data structures are contemplated within the scope of computer executable instructions and computer-usable data described herein. In addition, various signals representing data or events as described herein may be transferred between a source and a destination in the form of electromagnetic waves traveling through signal-conducting media such as metal wires, optical fibers, and/or wireless transmission media (e.g., air and/or space.)

As a general introduction to the subject matter described in more detail below, aspects described herein are directed towards systems, methods, and techniques for providing a distributed, persistent, and spatially-optimized simulation development environment. Other aspects described herein may allow for the integration of existing non-distributed simulation programs into a large-scale distributed simulation. Yet other aspects described herein may be used to automatically and spatially balance and distribute the simulation workload.

Computer software, hardware, and networks may be utilized in a variety of different system environments, including standalone, networked, virtualized, and/or cloud-based environments, among others. FIG. 1 illustrates one example of a block diagram of a spatially-optimized simulation computing device (or system) 101 in a spatially-optimized simulation computing system 100 that may be used according to one or more illustrative embodiments of the disclosure. The spatially-optimized simulation computing device 101 may comprise a processor 103 for controlling overall operation of the spatially-optimized simulation computing device 101 and its associated components, including RAM 105, ROM 107, input/output module 109, and memory 111. The spatially-optimized simulation computing device 101, along with one or more additional computing devices (e.g., network nodes 123, 125, 127, 129, and 131) may correspond to any one of multiple systems or devices described herein, such as personal mobile devices, client computing devices, proprietary simulation systems, additional external servers and other various devices in a spatially-optimized simulation computing system 100. These various computing systems may be configured individually or in combination, as described herein, for providing a spatially-optimized simulation computing system 100. In addition to the features described above, the techniques described herein also may be used for allowing integration of existing simulation programs, and for spatially load-balancing the simulation workload across the spatially-optimized simulation computing system 100, as will be discussed more fully herein. Those of skill in the art will appreciate that the functionality of spatially-optimized simulation computing device 101 (or devices 123, 125, 127, 129, and 131) as described herein may be spread across multiple processing devices, for example, to distribute processing load across multiple computers, to segregate transactions based on processor load, location within a simulated world, user access level, quality of service (QoS), and the like.

The various network nodes 123, 125, 127, 129, and 131 may be interconnected via a network 121, such as the Internet. Other networks may also or alternatively be used, including private intranets, corporate networks, local area networks (LAN), wide area networks (WAN), metropolitan area networks (MAN), wireless networks, personal networks (PAN), and the like. Network 121 is for illustration purposes and may be replaced with fewer or additional computer networks. Network 121 may have one or more of any known network topology and may use one or more of a variety of different protocols, such as Ethernet. Devices 123, 125, 127, 129, 131, and other devices (not shown) may be connected to one or more of the networks via twisted pair wires, coaxial cable, fiber optics, radio waves, or other communication media.

It will be appreciated that the network connections shown are illustrative and other means of establishing a communications link between the computers may be used. The existence of any of various network protocols such as TCP/IP, Ethernet, FTP, HTTP and the like, and of various wireless communication technologies such as GSM, CDMA, Wi-Fi, and WiMAX, is presumed, and the various computing devices in spatially-optimized simulation system components described herein may be configured to communicate using any of these network protocols or technologies.

The term “network” as used herein and depicted in the drawings refers not only to systems in which remote computing devices are coupled together via one or more communication paths, but also to stand-alone devices that may be coupled, from time to time, to such systems that have storage capability. Consequently, the term “network” includes not only a “physical network” but also a “content network,” which is comprised of the data which resides across all physical networks.

The Input/Output (I/O) module 109 may include a microphone, keypad, touch screen, game controller, joystick, and/or stylus through which a user of the spatially-optimized simulation computing device 101 may provide input, and may also include one or more of a speaker for providing audio output and a video display device for providing textual, audiovisual and/or graphical output. Software may be stored within memory 111 and/or storage to provide instructions to processor 103 for enabling a spatially-optimized simulation computing device 101 to perform various actions. For example, memory 111 may store software used by a spatially-optimized simulation computing device 101, such as an operating system 113, application programs 115, and an associated internal database 117. The database 117 may include a second database (e.g., as a separate table, report, etc.) That is, the information may be stored in a single database, or separated into different logical, virtual, or physical databases, depending on system design. The various hardware memory units in memory 111 may include volatile and nonvolatile, removable and non-removable media implemented in any method or technology for storage of information such as computer-readable instructions, data structures, program modules, or other data. Spatially-optimized simulation computing device 101 and/or computing devices 127, 129, 131 may also be mobile terminals (e.g., mobile phones, smartphones, personal digital assistants (PDAs), notebooks, etc.) including various other components, such as a battery, speaker, and antennas (not shown.)

Aspects described herein may also be operational with numerous other general purpose or special purpose computing system environments or configurations. Examples of other computing systems, environments, and/or configurations that may be suitable for use with aspects described herein include, but are not limited to, personal computers, server computers, hand-held or laptop devices, vehicle-based computing devices, multiprocessor systems, microprocessor-based systems, programmable consumer electronics, network personal computers (PCs), minicomputers, mainframe computers, distributed computing environments that include any of the above systems or devices, and the like.

FIG. 2 shows a high-level architecture of an illustrative spatially-optimized simulation system. As shown, the spatially-optimized simulation system 200 may be a single server system, a multi-server system, or a cloud-based system, including at least one virtual server 202 which may be configured to provide spatially-optimized simulation functionality to the spatially-optimized simulation system 200 and/or may provide access to the spatially-optimized simulation system 200 to one or more client computing devices (e.g., computing devices 123, 125, 127, 129, 131.) A virtual server 202 may comprise one or more virtual machines 240 a-240 n (generally referred to herein as “virtual machine(s) 240”). Each virtual machine 240 may comprise an instance of a spatial simulation runtime 248 for instantiating, managing, and monitoring one or more instances of server worker processes 249 a-249 n (generally referred to herein as “worker(s) 249.”) As described in further detail below, the spatial simulation runtime 248 may be configured to automatically spool up or spool down workers 249, as needed, based on the instantaneous workload of particular regions of the simulated world generated by the spatially-optimized simulation system.

The one or more instances of the spatial simulation runtime 248 within a virtual server 202 may communicate with each other to determine an instance which may serve as a master. For example, the spatial simulation runtime 248 instances may utilize a consensus protocol to determine a master. A master spatial simulation runtime 248 instance may be responsible for routing communications between the other spatial simulation runtime 248 instances within the virtual server 202 and other spatial simulation runtimes 248 executing in other virtual servers 202. As will be explained in greater detail below, the spatial simulation runtime 248 may allow for spatially-optimized distributed simulations where simulation workload is automatically distributed across available virtual server(s) 202. The virtual server 202 illustrated in FIG. 2 may be deployed as and/or implemented by one or more embodiments of the spatially-optimized simulation computing device 101 illustrated in FIG. 1 or by other known computing devices.

The virtual server 202 may comprise a hardware layer 210 with one or more hardware elements that communicate with the virtual server 202. Optionally, the hardware layer 210 may comprise one or more physical disks 212, one or more physical devices 214, one more physical processors 216, and one or more physical memories 218. Physical components 212, 214, 216, and 218 may include, for example, any of the components described above with respect to spatial simulation computing device 101. In one example, physical devices 214 may include a network interface card, a video card, a keyboard, a mouse, an input device, a monitor, a display device, speakers, an optical drive, a storage device, a universal serial bus connection, a printer, a scanner, a network element (e.g., router, firewall, network address translator, load balancer, virtual private network (VPN) gateway, Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) router, etc.), or any device connected to or communicating with virtualization server 301. Physical memory 218 may include any type of memory. In another example, physical memory 218 may store data, and may store one or more programs, or set of executable instructions. Programs or executable instructions stored in the physical memory 218 may be executed by the one or more processors 216 of virtual server 202. Virtual server 202 may further comprise a host operating system 220 which may be stored in a memory element in the physical memory 218 and may be executed by one or more of the physical processors 216.

Hypervisor 230 may provide virtual resources to operating systems 246 a-246 n or to workers 249 executing on virtual machines 240 in any manner that simulates the operating systems 246 or workers 249 having direct access to system resources. System resources may include, but are not limited to, physical disks 212, physical devices 214, physical processors 216, physical memory 218, and any other component included in hardware layer 210. Hypervisor 230 may be used to emulate virtual hardware, partition physical hardware, virtualize physical hardware, and/or execute virtual machines that provide computing resources to spatial simulation runtime 248 and workers 249. Hypervisor 230 may control processor scheduling and memory partitioning for a virtual machine 240 executing on virtual server 202.

Hypervisor 230 may be Type 2 hypervisor, where the hypervisor may execute within a host operating system 220 executing on the virtual server 202. Virtual machines 240 may then execute at a level above the hypervisor 230. The Type 2 hypervisor may execute within the context of a host operating system 220 such that the Type 2 hypervisor interacts with the host operating system 220. One or more virtual server 202 in a spatial simulation system 200 may instead include a Type 1 hypervisor (not shown.) A Type 1 hypervisor may execute on a virtual server 202 by directly accessing the hardware and resources within the hardware layer 210. That is, while a Type 2 hypervisor 230 may access system resources through a host operating system 220, as shown, a Type 1 hypervisor may directly access all system resources without the host operating system 220. A Type 1 hypervisor 230 may execute directly on one or more physical processors 316 of virtual server 202, and may include program data stored in the physical memory 318.

The spatial simulation runtime 248 may cause the hypervisor 230 to create one or more virtual machines 240 in which additional spatial simulation runtime 248 and worker 249 instances may execute within guest operating systems 246. Hypervisor 230 may load a virtual machine image to create a virtual machine 240. The hypervisor 230 may execute a guest operating system 246 within virtual machine 240. Virtual machine 240 may execute guest operating system 246.

In addition to creating virtual machines 240, hypervisor 230 may control the execution of at least one virtual machine 240. Hypervisor 230 may present at least one virtual machine 240 with an abstraction of at least one hardware resource provided by the virtual server 202 (e.g., any hardware resource available within the hardware layer 210.) Hypervisor 230 may control the manner in which virtual machines 240 may access physical processors 216 available in virtual server 202. Controlling access to physical processors 216 may include determining whether a virtual machine 240 should have access to a processor 216, and how physical processor capabilities are presented to the virtual machine 240.

As shown in FIG. 2, virtual server 202 may host or execute one or more virtual machines 240. A virtual machine 240 is a set of executable instructions that, when executed by a processor 216, imitate the operation of a physical computer such that the virtual machine 240 may execute programs and processes much like a physical computing device. While FIG. 2 illustrates an embodiment where a virtual server 202 hosts two virtual machines 240, in other embodiments virtual server 202 may host any number of virtual machines 240. Hypervisor 230 may provide each virtual machine 240 with a unique virtual view of the physical hardware, memory, processor, and other system resources available to that virtual machine 240. Optionally, hypervisor 230 may provide each virtual machine 240 with a substantially similar virtual view of the physical hardware, memory, processor, and other system resources available to the virtual machines 240.

Each virtual machine 240 may include a virtual disk 242 a-242 n (generally 242) and a virtual processor 244 a-244 n (generally 244.) The virtual disk 242 may be a virtualized view of one or more physical disks 212 of the virtual server 202, or may be a portion of one or more physical disks 212 of the virtual server 202. The virtualized view of the physical disks 212 may be generated, provided, and managed by the hypervisor 230. Hypervisor 230 may provide each virtual machine 240 with a unique view of the physical disks 212. Thus, the particular virtual disk 242 included in each virtual machine 240 may be unique when compared with the other virtual disks 240.

A virtual machine 240 a-240 n may execute, using a virtual processor 244 a-244 n, one or more workers 249 a-249 n using a guest operating system 246 a-246 n. The guest operating system 246 may be any one of the following non-exhaustive list of operating systems: WINDOWS, UNIX, LINUX, iOS, ANDROID, SYMBIAN. Guest operating system 246 may be a purpose-built operating system based on one or more of the aforementioned operating systems. For example, guest operating system 246 may consist of a purpose-built version of LINUX which may comprise only the functional modules necessary to support operation of the workers 249. Optionally, and as described in further detail below, a virtual machine 240 a-240 n may execute one or more bridge modules (not shown) corresponding to the one or more workers 249 a-249 n executing in the virtual machine 240 a-240 n. A virtual machine 240 a-240 n may also host one or more chunk modules (not shown), a receptionist module (not shown), and an oracle module (not shown.)

FIG. 2 illustrates just one example of a spatially-optimized simulation system that may be used, and those of skill in the art will appreciate that the specific system architecture and computing devices used may vary, and are secondary to the functionality that they provide, as further described herein.

Referring to FIG. 3, some aspects described herein may be implemented in a cloud-based environment. FIG. 3 illustrates an example of a spatially-optimized simulation environment (e.g., a development environment) based on a cloud-based computing platform system 300. As shown in FIG. 3, client computing devices 340 a-340 n (generally 340) may communicate via the Internet 330 to access the spatially-optimized simulation executing on the virtual servers 202 (e.g., spatial simulation runtime 248, server workers 249, bridge modules (not shown), chunk modules (not shown), receptionist module (not shown), and an oracle module (not shown)) of the cloud-based computing platform 310.

The spatial simulation runtime 248 contains the program code to implement the elements and components which comprise the spatially-optimized simulation environment, as described in further detail herein. For example, the spatial simulation runtime 248 may comprise implementation code for one or more of the bridge modules, chunk modules, receptionist module, and oracle module of the cloud-based computing platform 310, as further described herein and as illustratively shown in FIG. 11, as well as provide worker management functions (starting processes, stopping processes, etc.). Additionally and alternatively, the spatial simulation runtime 248 may also expose an application programming interface (API) which may be utilized to monitor status, instantaneously and/or periodically, of the spatially-optimized simulation environment. The monitoring API may also be utilized to debug the status and behavior of the spatially-optimized simulation environment. In an illustrative embodiment, the spatial simulation runtime 248 may be implemented as a JAR (Java ARchive).

The cloud-based computing platform 310 may comprise private and/or public hardware and software resources and components. For example, a cloud may be configured as a private cloud to be used by one or more particular customers or client computing devices 340 and/or over a private network. Public clouds or hybrid public-private clouds may be used by other customers over open or hybrid networks. Known cloud systems may alternatively be used, e.g., MICROSOFT AZURE (Microsoft Corporation of Redmond, Wash.), AMAZON EC2 (Amazon.com Inc. of Seattle, Wash.), GOOGLE COMPUTE ENGINE (Google Inc. of Mountain View, Calif.), or others.

The spatially-optimized simulation development environment 300 may be deployed as a Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS) cloud-based computing service which may provide a platform for allowing a user to develop, run, and manage a spatially-optimized simulation. This may allow a user or client to create a spatially-optimized simulation without understanding the intricacies of distributed computation or requiring access to infrastructure teams or supercomputers. The spatially-optimized simulation development environment 300 may be delivered as a public cloud service from a provider. In such a scenario, client organizations may provide pre-existing models, simulations, and/or databases which may be integrated with the spatially-optimized simulation development environment 300. Alternatively, the spatially-optimized simulation development environment may be delivered as a private service within a private network of a client organization.

The cloud-based computing platform 310 may comprise one or more virtual servers 202 a-202 f (generally 202) such as the virtual server 202 illustrated in FIG. 2. Optionally, the cloud-based computing platform 310 may comprise special-purpose virtual and/or physical computing resources which may be configured to provide spatially-optimized simulation functionality as described herein. Although FIG. 3 illustrates six virtual servers 202 (i.e., 202 a-2020, those of skill in the art will appreciate that cloud-based computing platform 310 may comprise any number of virtual servers 202. The virtual servers 202 may be interconnected via one or more networks in a manner that may allow each virtual server 202 to communicate directly with any other virtual server 202 in the cloud-based computing platform 310 in a peer-to-peer fashion. Optionally, virtual servers 202 may be arranged into a plurality of clusters of virtual servers. For example, clusters of virtual servers may be arranged based on a physical location of the physical computing resources used by the cloud-based computing platform 310. In such an example, one cluster may be a first cloud datacenter located in California, and another cluster may be a second cloud datacenter located in Ireland (these are merely illustrative locations). In another example, clusters of virtual servers may be arranged based on an allocation to a spatially-optimized simulation. In such a scenario, one cluster may be comprised by a first subset of virtual servers 202 allocated to a first spatially-optimized simulation and another cluster may be a second subset of virtual servers 202 allocated to a second spatially-optimized simulation. A virtual server 202 may be manually or dynamically reassigned to a different cluster if or when the virtual server 202 is moved or if or when the computing resource requirements for the first spatially-optimized simulation and the second spatially-optimized simulation may change over time. Client computing devices 340 connecting to a virtual server 202 may be unaware of which cluster, if any, the virtual server 202 belongs to and may also be unaware whether the virtual server 202 may change membership from one cluster to another during the course of the connection.

The cloud-based computing platform system 300 may also comprise a cloud-based data store 320. The storage resources in the cloud-based data store 320 may include storage disks (e.g., solid state drives (SSDs), magnetic hard disks, etc.) and other storage devices. Alternatively, the cloud-based data store 320 may be provided by a known cloud-based storage provider, such as, AMAZON S3 (Amazon.com Inc. of Seattle, Wash.), GOOGLE CLOUD STORAGE (Google Inc. of Mountain View, Calif.), or others. Optionally, the cloud-based data store 320 may be implemented or deployed separately from cloud-based computing platform 310 as shown in FIG. 3. Optionally, the cloud-based data store 320 may be implemented or deployed within the cloud-based computing platform 310. For example, both the cloud-based computing platform 310 and the cloud-based data store 320 may be provided by a cloud systems provider as part of the resources assigned to the cloud system by the provider.

The cloud-based data store 320 may comprise one or more application assemblies 322. An application assembly 322 may comprise data which may define entities and components of a spatially-optimized simulation, as well as, procedures which may define one or more behaviors of each of the entities and components in a spatially-optimized simulation. Optionally, an application assembly 322 may comprise schemas, data structures, serialized objects, and the like which may define the entities and components which make up a spatially-optimized simulation. Optionally, an application assembly 322 may comprise computer-readable code or instructions, scripts, statically-linked libraries, dynamically-linked libraries, and the like which may define one or more behaviors for the elements in the spatially-optimized simulation. Virtual servers 202 in the cloud-based computing platform 310 may load an application assembly from the cloud-based data store 320. The spatial simulation runtime 248 in each virtual server 202 may use the data and procedures comprised in an application assembly 322 to cause the execution of a distributed, persistent, and spatially-optimized simulation. The cloud-based data store 320 may also comprise initialization data and/or procedures 324 which define a starting or initial condition for a spatially-optimized simulation. For example, the cloud-based computing platform 310 may load initialization data 324 from the cloud-based data store 320 which may cause a predetermined number of entities and components to be instantiated and initialized to a predetermined initial state. In another example, the cloud-based computing platform 310 may load and may execute one or more initialization procedures 324 which may cause a predetermined number of entities and components to be instantiated and initialized to a predetermined state. In yet another example, the entities and the components may be instantiated and initialized to a predetermined state based on a combination of initialization data 324 and initialization procedures 324 loaded by the cloud-based computing platform 310 from the cloud-based data store 320.

The cloud-based data store 320 may comprise a snapshot 326 of a simulation. A simulation snapshot 326 may define a valid state of a simulation, and may comprise data and/or procedures which may return a spatially-optimized simulation to that valid state if or when it is loaded and/or executed by the cloud-based computing platform 310 from the cloud-based data store 320. The valid simulation state defined by snapshot 326 may be a known state or a desired state of the simulation. Optionally, the simulation state defined by snapshot 326 may be a previously saved state of a running simulation.

A portion of the cloud-based computing platform 310 may be related, for example, one or more virtual servers 202 may be executing a spatially-optimized simulation on behalf of the same end user, or on behalf of different users affiliated with the same company or organization. In other examples, certain virtual servers 202 may be unrelated, such as users affiliated with different companies or organizations. For unrelated clients, information on the virtual servers 202 or cloud-based data store 320 of any one user may be hidden from other users.

In some instances, client computing devices 340 may implement, incorporate, and/or otherwise include one or more aspects of computing device 101 and computing device 202. Client computing devices 340 may be any type of computing device capable of receiving and processing input via one or more user interfaces, providing output via one or more user interfaces and communicating input, output, and/or other information to and/or from one or more other computing devices. For example, client computing devices 340 may be desktop computers, laptop computers, tablet computers, smart phones, or the like. In addition, and as illustrated in greater detail below, any and/or all of client computing devices 340 may, in some instances, be special-purpose computing devices configured to perform specific functions.

The client computing devices 340 may comprise a worker integration library 342 and an instance of a worker process 249. A client computing device 340 may utilize the worker integration library 342 and the worker process 249 to connect to a spatially-optimized simulation executing in the cloud-based computing platform 310. As described in further detail below, a client computing device 340 may receive data from the cloud-based computing platform 310 describing relevant portions of the spatially-optimized simulation. The worker process 249 executing in the client computing device 340 may utilize that received data to render the relevant portions of the spatially-optimized simulation on a display or other user interface device. The client computing device 340 may also transmit data and commands to cloud-based computing platform 310 which may affect the state of the spatially-optimized simulation. The data and commands may be transmitted in response to user input. Optionally, the transmitted data and commands may be generated in response to calculations performed by the worker integration library 342 or the worker process 249.

Advantageously, and as illustrated in greater detail above, a simulation developer using a spatially-optimized simulation development environment may be able to scale up a game or simulation to be considerably larger than would be possible using a single machine. In addition, the spatially-optimized simulation development environment may allow for an arbitrary number of user participants and data sources to integrate into the simulation. Furthermore, the spatially-optimized simulation development environment may remove the need for a simulation developer to worry about scalability or data synchronization among different parts of the spatially-optimized simulation.

FIG. 3 illustrates just one example of a spatially-optimized simulation development environment that may be used, and those of skill in the art will appreciate that the specific system architecture and computing devices used may vary, and are secondary to the functionality that they provide, as further described herein.

FIG. 4 illustrates one example of a block diagram of a spatially-optimized simulation that may be implemented according to one or more illustrative examples of the disclosure. A spatially-optimized simulated world 410 may comprise a collection of entities (e.g., entity 1 420, entity 2 430, and entity N 430.) An entity may represent a fundamental computational unit or other unit of simulated world 410. While FIG. 4 illustrates a simulated world 410 comprising three entity types, in other examples, a simulated world 410 may comprise any number of entity types. Additionally, simulated world 410 may comprise any number of instances of each entity type. For example, in a city simulation, simulated world 410 may comprise a car entity, a pedestrian entity, a traffic signal entity, a road entity, a building entity, and the like. In such a scenario, the city simulation may comprise large and different quantities of instances of each entity. In another example, in a video game world simulation, simulated world 410 may comprise a monster entity, a player entity, a weapon entity, a tree entity, a rock entity, and the like. The video game simulated world may comprise a handful of instances of the monster entity, one player entity instance for each player active in the game, and potentially millions of instances of the tree and rock entities. In yet another example, in a trading simulation, simulated world 410 may comprise a trader entity, a stock entity, a mutual fund entity, a market agent entity, and the like. The simulated trading world may comprise small numbers of trader and market agent entities and may also comprise thousands of stock and mutual fund entities.

The state and behavior of an entity (e.g., 420, 430, and 440) may be determined by the combination of components (e.g., 421, 422, 423, 431, 432, 433, and 441) comprised by the entity. Each component (e.g., 421, 422, 423, 431, 432, 433, and 441) may comprise a subset of the state and behavior attributed to the entity (e.g., 420, 430, and 440) as a whole. For example, as shown in FIG. 4, entity 1 420 may comprise component A 421, component B 422, and component C 423; entity 2 430 may comprise component A 431, component D 432, and component E 433; and entity N 440 may comprise component F 441. As will be appreciated by one of skill in the art, the number and types of components comprised by any one entity may be arbitrary and not limited to the example illustrated in FIG. 4. Optionally, two or more entities may comprise different instances of a particular component if or when the two or more entities have a set of properties and behaviors in common. For example, entity 1 420 may represent a rock in a video game simulation and entity 2 430 may represent a monster in the same simulation. Both entities (i.e., 420 and 430) may share a component A (e.g., 421 and 431) which may define the properties and behaviors for a rigid body, i.e., mass and velocity.

Entities (e.g., 420, 430, and 440) may comprise properties which may be common across all entities. For example, entities (e.g., 420, 430, and 440) may comprise an identifier value which may be used to uniquely identify each entity instance within simulated world 410. Entities (e.g., 420, 430, and 440) may comprise properties which may be shared across multiple components. For example, entities (e.g., 420, 430, and 440) in a video game simulation may comprise position and velocity values since it is likely that most components in such a simulation may require access to those values. Additionally, locating commonly used properties within an entity may reduce coupling between the components and facilitate communication between the components of an entity.

Referring to FIG. 5, some aspects described herein may be implemented, incorporated, and/or otherwise included by one or more components 421, 422, 423, 431, 432, 433, and 441. FIG. 5 illustrates an example implementation of a component 510 in a spatially-optimized simulation system as described herein. A component 510 may comprise a collection of related persistent properties 530 a-530 n (generally 530) and events 550 a-550 z (generally 550.) The component 510 may also comprise procedures 540 which may change the value of the component's properties and may generate events. Procedures 540 may execute, as part of a server worker 249 a-249 n, in a server such as one of the servers illustrated in FIGS. 2-3 (e.g., 240 a-240 n, 202 a-202 f, and 340 a-340 n.) A spatial simulation runtime 248 or other software entity may delegate the write authority of the properties and event generation from the component 510 to a specialized worker 560. Other components and/or workers executing within a spatially-optimized simulation may cause or trigger updates in the state of component 510 via commands 520 a-520 m (generally 520.) Alternatively, no delegation may take place.

Components may comprise one or more properties 530. The state of a component 510 may be defined by the values held by the properties 530 comprised by the component 510. Similarly, the state of an entity may be defined by the values held by the properties 530 of all the components comprised by the entity. The state of a component 510 may be stored in local memory (e.g., 242 a-242 n, 244 a-244 n, 218) for access during execution of the spatially-optimized simulation. Optionally, the state of a component 510 may be stored in cloud-based data store 320 as part of a snapshot 326 and thus may be persisted across simulation runs. The state of a component 510 may be stored periodically (e.g., continuously.) The rate at which the state of a component 510 is persisted may vary based on one or more factors. For example, if or when the state of a component 510 changes rapidly, the storage rate may also increase commensurate with the rate of change. In another example, the storage rate may be higher for properties which may require a higher degree of accuracy than other properties.

Where it is described that an entity or component may exhibit a certain behavior, it is to be understood that another element, such as a worker module, for example, may perform the required calculations on behalf of that entity or component and emit or receive the corresponding signals or data.

Events 550 may indicate the occurrence of a transient action on component 510. Component 510 may emit one or more events 550 in response to making a determination (or events 550 may be emitted for one or more components 510), reaching a particular result, receiving user input, or another type of trigger. Other components within the spatially-optimized simulation may monitor the occurrence of an event 550 and update their state or perform an action in response to the event 550. The other components may be comprised by the same entity (e.g., a worker module) as the emitting component or may be comprised by other entities within the spatially-optimized simulation. For example, a traffic signal entity in a city simulation may emit an event if or when the traffic signal indicator changes to red. A vehicle entity in the city emulation may receive the event and may come to a stop in response to the event. In another example, a rigid body component may emit an event if or when it has determined that it has collided with another object.

Optionally, component 510 may comprise procedures 540 which may update the values of properties 530, as well as, cause the component 510 to emit events 550. Procedures 540 may also receive and process commands 520 from other components and/or the spatial simulation runtime 248. Thus, procedures 540 may define the behavior of component 510 within the spatially-optimized simulation. Alternatively, a spatial simulation runtime 248 may delegate to a specialized worker 560 the implementation of the behavior of component 510. In such a scenario, spatial simulation runtime 248 may delegate write access of properties 530 and events 550 from component 510 to specialized worker 560. Component 510 may have at most one writer assigned to it at any one time. Thus, a spatial simulation runtime 248 may remove the ability of procedures 540 to modify properties 530 and emit events 550 until delegation to specialized worker 560 is revoked. Optionally, a specialized worker 560 may implement the behavior of a component based on real-time and/or real-world behavior of a physical entity being simulated. For example, a specialized worker 560 may periodically collect position, velocity, and direction data from one or more sensors mounted on a vehicle or other moving object and use that information to modify properties 530 and emit events 550 of component 510. In another example, a specialized worker 560 may receive previously recorded real-world position, velocity, and direction data of a vehicle or other moving object and use that information to modify properties 530 and emit events 550 of component 510. Thus, a specialized worker 560 may be used to incorporate real-time and/or real-world into the spatial simulation. Any other real world objects, people, events, and/or systems may be used to generate data as input for a simulation.

Delegation may require specification of a worker constraint which may identify a type of worker capable of simulating the behavior of component 510. Worker 560 may be one of a plurality of worker types which may be specialized to perform certain kinds of computations. Specialized workers 560 may only understand a subset of the components (e.g., 421, 422, 423, 431, 432, 433, and 441) that define entities (e.g., 420, 430, and 440) within a spatially-optimized simulation 410. For example, in a city simulation, one worker type may simulate vehicle positions, another worker type may simulate traffic signals, and yet another type may simulate environmental emissions.

Worker 560 may comprise data structures and/or objects and software programs to simulate the behavior of a subset of the components (e.g., 421, 422, 423, 431, 432, 433, and 441) within a spatially-optimized simulation 410. Worker 560 may be a process corresponding to one or more aspects of workers 249, as described in FIGS. 2 & 3. Thus, worker 560 may execute, as part of a server worker 249 a-249 n, in a server such as one of the servers illustrated in FIGS. 2-3 (e.g., 240 a-240 n, 202 a-202 f, and 340 a-340 n.) Worker 560 may read the properties 530 of any component (e.g., 421, 422, 423, 431, 432, 433, and 441) in spatially-optimized simulation 410. However, worker 560 may only write the properties 530 of those components (e.g., 421, 422, 423, 431, 432, 433, and 441) that have delegated their write authority to worker 560. A worker 560 may be said to be authoritative for a component 510 if or when component 510 has delegated its write authority to worker 560. Worker 560 may be authoritative to a subset of entities (e.g., 420, 430, and 440) within a spatially-optimized simulation 410. Optionally, worker 560 may be authoritative to one or more entities which may be located close to each other within spatially-optimized simulation 410.

In order to simulate the behavior of a component (e.g., 421, 422, 423, 431, 432, 433, and 441), worker 560 may need information (e.g., properties, events) from nearby entities (e.g., 420, 430, and 440) within spatially-optimized simulation 410. For example, a worker simulating a traffic intersection in a city simulation may need information from vehicles in nearby intersections, but not from vehicles which are miles away from the intersection. The interest region for worker 560 may comprise all regions comprising nearby entities (e.g., 420, 430, and 440) from which the worker 560 needs information. The interest region for worker 560 may comprise entities (e.g., 420, 430, and 440) for which worker 560 is not authoritative. The spatially-optimized simulation 410 may automatically synchronize the data between worker 560 and the other workers which are authoritative for the nearby entities.

Worker 560 may communicate with the spatially-optimized simulation 410 (e.g. with entities) via a bridge 610, as illustrated in FIG. 6. FIG. 6 illustrates an example implementation of a worker 560 communicating with a bridge 610 in a spatially-optimized simulation 410 as described herein. A bridge 610 may be responsible for communicating relevant information (e.g., properties, events) from worker 560 to other interested workers within a spatially-optimized simulation 410. Bridge 610 may also be responsible for communicating relevant information from nearby entities within the interest region for worker 560. Bridge 610 may be assigned to only one worker 560 and worker 560 may communicate with only one bridge 610. That is, there may be a one-to-one relationship between bridge 610 and worker 560. Bridge 610 may execute, as part of a server worker 249 a-249 n, in a server such as one of the servers illustrated in FIGS. 2-3 (e.g., 240 a-240 n, 202 a-202 f, and 340 a-340 n.)

Communication between bridge 610 and worker 560 may be effectuated via a worker application programming interface (API). Optionally, worker 560 may be wrapped by worker API wrapper 630. Worker API wrapper may allow a worker 560 which may have been developed independently from the spatially-optimized simulation development environment to possibly function within and by managed by bridge 610. Optionally, the worker API may allow for the integration of pre-existing non-distributed simulation programs into a large-scale distributed spatially-optimized simulation. For example, a game engine (e.g., UNITY by Unity Technologies SF of San Francisco, Calif.) may be integrated into a spatially-optimized simulation to simulate rigid-body physics or to provide client-side rendering and navigation. In another example, a multi-modal traffic flow simulation software package (e.g., open source MATSIM, or other commercially available software packages) may be integrated into a city spatially-optimized simulation. Other worker engines or programs may alternatively or also be used.

In another example implementation, specialized worker 560 may require special-purpose hardware or other physical resources that might not be available within a cloud-based platform 310. In such a scenario, the worker API wrapper 640 and bridge 610 may reside on a computing device physically located remotely from the cloud-based platform 310 and may connect to the cloud-based platform 310 via the Internet or another type of network. Such a specialized worker 560, which may reside outside of the cloud-based platform 310, (e.g., may execute on client devices 340 a-340 n) may be referred to as an external worker. And another specialized worker 560, which may execute within the cloud-based platform 310, (e.g., may execute on servers 240 a-240 n, 202 a-202 f) may be referred to as an internal worker. Any one or more of the features described with reference to the cloud-based platform 310 may be used in or with this example implementation.

The worker API may allow a bridge to add or remove entities from the interest region of a worker, notify a worker of component state changes, delegate a component to a worker or to remove the delegation, signal component state changes for components on which the worker is authoritative, among other related functionality as described herein.

Among the functions provided by the worker API may be functions for adding or removing an entity. Optionally, worker API wrapper 630 may comprise a handler method to be called by bridge 610 when an entity enters the interest region of worker 560. For example, Method 1 is one example of a method signature that may be used to add an entity to the interest region of worker 560.

Method 1:

void OnEntityAdd(EntityId eid, EntityState initialState); where

eid is a value which may uniquely identify the entity being added; and

initialState is a data structure and/or object which may describe the initial state of the entity being added.

Although Method 1 is provided as an example for adding an entity to the interest region of worker 560, various other methods and/or functions may be used. For instance, other parameters may be included in the method without departing from the disclosure. Method 1 may then be passed to a RegisterEntityAddHandler( ) worker API function, which may cause the Method 1 handler to be called whenever an entity should be added.

Optionally, worker API wrapper 630 may comprise a handler method to be called by bridge 610 when an entity leaves the interest region of worker 560. For example, Method 2 is one example of a method signature that may be used to remove an entity from the interest region of worker 560.

Method 2:

void OnEntityRemove(EntityId eid); where

eid is a value which may uniquely identify the entity being removed.

Although Method 2 is provided as an example for removing an entity from the interest region of worker 560, various other methods and/or functions may be used. For instance, other parameters may be included in the method without departing from the disclosure. Method 2 may then be passed to a RegisterEntityRemoveHandler( ) worker API function, which may cause the Method 2 handler to be called whenever an entity should be removed.

The worker API may also comprise functions for notifying a worker that the properties of a component within the worker's interest region have changed state. For example, worker API wrapper 630 may comprise a handler method to be called by bridge 610 when the properties of a component within the interest region of worker 560 have changed state. Method 3 is one example of a method signature that may be used to notify worker 560 of the changed state.

Method 3:

void OnStateChanged_Component1(EntityId eid, SomeState state); where

eid is a value which may uniquely identify the entity which may comprise the component whose properties changed state; and

state is a data structure and/or object which may describe the state of the component.

Although Method 3 is provided as an example for notifying worker 560 of a changed state, various other methods and/or functions may be used. For instance, other parameters may be included in the method without departing from the disclosure. In some variants, the state parameter may comprise only the subset of properties of the component that have changed since the last update, for efficiency. Method 3 may then be passed to a AddComponentStateChangeHandler( ) worker API function, which may cause the Method 3 handler to be called whenever the properties of a component within the worker's interest region have changed state.

Among the functions provided by the worker API may be functions for dynamically changing component authority assignments. Worker API wrapper 630 may comprise a handler method to be called by bridge 610 when worker 560 may now be authoritative for a component. For example, Method 4 is one example of a method signature that may be used to delegate component authority to worker 560.

Method 4:

void OnComponentDelegate(EntityId eid, ComponentId cid); where

eid is a value which may uniquely identify the entity which may comprise the component being delegated; and

cid is a value which may uniquely identify the component being delegated.

Although Method 4 is provided as an example for delegating component authority to worker 560, various other methods and/or functions may be used. For instance, other parameters may be included in the method without departing from the disclosure. Method 4 may then be passed to a RegisterComponentDelegateHandler( ) worker API function, which may cause the Method 4 handler to be called whenever worker 560 may now be authoritative for a component.

Optionally, worker API wrapper 630 may comprise a handler method to be called by bridge 610 when worker 560 may no longer be authoritative for a component. For example, Method 5 is one example of a method signature that may be used to remove delegation authority for a component from worker 560.

Method 5:

void OnComponentUndelegate(EntityId eid, ComponentId cid); where

eid is a value which may uniquely identify the entity which may comprise the component being undelegated; and

cid is a value which may uniquely identify the component being undelegated.

Although Method 5 is provided as an example for removing delegation authority for a component from worker 560, various other methods and/or functions may be used. For instance, other parameters may be included in the method without departing from the disclosure. Method 5 may then be passed to a RegisterComponentUndelegateHandler( ) worker API function, which may cause the Method 5 handler to be called whenever worker 560 may no longer be authoritative for a component.

In yet other examples, worker API wrapper 630 may comprise a handler method to be called by bridge 610 for setting or unsetting a worker 560 as authoritative for a component. For example, Method 7 is one example of a method signature that may be used to set or remove delegation authority for a component for worker 560.

Method 6:

void SetIsAuthoritative(EntityId eid, ComponentId cid, Boolean isAuthoritative); where

eid is a value which may uniquely identify the entity which may comprise the component;

cid is a value which may uniquely identify the component; and

isAuthoritative is a true/false value which may indicate whether to set or unset worker 560 as authoritative for a component.

Although Method 6 is provided as an example for setting or unsetting a worker 560 as authoritative for a component, various other methods and/or functions may be used. For instance, other parameters may be included in the method without departing from the disclosure.

The worker API may also comprise functions for notifying other workers that the properties of a component for which worker 560 is authoritative have changed state. For example, worker API wrapper 630 may comprise a method to be called by worker API wrapper 630 when the properties of a component for which worker 560 is authoritative have changed state. Method 7 is one example of a method signature that may be used to update the properties of the components for which worker 560 is authoritative.

Method 7:

void UpdateState_Component1(EntityId eid, SomeState state); where

eid is a value which may uniquely identify the entity which may comprise the component whose properties changed state; and

state is a data structure and/or object which may describe the updated state of the component.

Although Method 7 is provided as an example for updating the properties of the components for which worker 560 is authoritative, various other methods and/or functions may be used. For instance, other parameters may be included in the method without departing from the disclosure. Method 7 may be called whenever the properties of a component for which worker 560 is authoritative have changed state.

Optionally, worker 560 may be configured to periodically send a heartbeat signal to bridge 610. If or when worker 560 ceases to transmit heartbeat signals, bridge 610 may determine that worker process 560 may have terminated unexpectedly. In response to the determination, bridge 610 may terminate cleanly and request that a replacement worker process 560 (and new counterpart bridge 610) be allocated and instantiated.

FIG. 7 depicts a flowchart that illustrates a method of registering a worker process with a spatially-optimized simulation. The algorithm shown in FIG. 7 and other similar examples described herein may be performed in a computing environment such as the system illustrated in FIGS. 3-6, as well as other systems having different architectures (e.g., all or part of FIGS. 1-2.) The method illustrated in FIG. 7 and/or one or more steps thereof may be embodied in a computer-readable medium, such as a non-transitory computer readable memory.

Referring to FIG. 7, step 702, a spatial simulation runtime 248 may have instantiated and provisioned a server worker process 249 on a virtual server 202 based on a determination that a new worker 560 instance was needed. For example, spatial simulation runtime 248 may have detected increased simulation workload which may require an additional worker 560 instance to be created. In another example, spatial simulation runtime 248 may have detected that a pre-existing worker instance may have crashed and must be replaced by a new worker 560 instance. In step 704, worker 560 may send a message or otherwise signal to bridge 610 that worker 560 is ready to accept simulation work. In response to the receipt of the ready message from worker 560, bridge 610 may announce to the spatially-optimized simulation 410 that worker 560 is ready to accept simulation work, as shown in step 706. A spatial simulation runtime 248 may, in step 708, cause bridge 610 to add one or more entities to the interest region of worker 560. For example, bridge 610 may call an OnEntityAdd method in worker API wrapper 630 to add each of the one or more entities. A spatial simulation runtime 248 may, in step 710, cause bridge 610 (or other entity or module) to delegate write authority of one or more components to worker 560. For example, bridge 610 may call an OnComponentDelegate method in worker API wrapper 630 to delegate authority for each of the one or more components. In step 712, bridge 610 may notify worker 560 that one of the components within the interest region for worker 560 has changed state. For example, bridge 610 may call an OnStateChanged_Component1 method in worker API wrapper 630 to notify worker 560 of the change in the state of the component. Worker 560 may recalculate the state for each of the one or more components for which is it authoritative. If or when worker 560 determines, in step 714, that the state of a component has changed, then worker API wrapper 630 may call an UpdateState_Component1 method for each one of the one or more components whose state has changed, as shown in step 716, and the method ends. If or when worker 560 determines, in step 714, that none of the components have changed state, then worker 560 may return to step 712 and wait for another notification of a change in the state of the component in the interest region for worker 560.

FIG. 8A illustrates one example of a spatially-optimized simulated world 800 that may be implemented according to one or more illustrative embodiments of the disclosure. As shown in FIG. 8A, spatially-optimized simulated world 800 may be sub-divided into a plurality of chunks or regions. Although FIG. 8A illustrates a spatially-optimized simulated world 800 and chunks using two dimensions, those of skill in the art will appreciate that a spatially-optimized simulated world 800 and chunks may comprise one or more dimensions, as may be specified by a simulation developer. For example, a one-dimensional spatially-optimized simulated world 800 may be represented by a line and chunks may comprise portions of the line. In another example, spatially-optimized simulated world 800 may simulate a three-dimensional (3D) world and chunks may comprise three-dimensional portions (e.g., sphere, cube, etc.) of the 3D simulated world. Each chunk may be controlled by a chunk actor (e.g., chunk module), which is the program, process, routine, or agent responsible for content within that chunk.

Each chunk actor 810 aa-810 nn (generally 810) may be allocated to a chunk server (e.g., 820 a-820 c) such as the server illustrated in FIGS. 2-3 (e.g., 240 a-240 n, 202 a-202 f), as well as other systems having different architectures (e.g. all or part of FIG. 1.) A subset of chunk actors 810 may be allocated to the same chunk server such that the functionality associated with the subset of chunk actors 810 may be provided by the chunk server. For example, chunk actors 810 aa, 810 ab, 810 ba, and 810 bb may be allocated to a chunk server 820 a; chunk actors 810 ac, 810 ad, 810 ae, 810 bc, 810 bd, 810 be, 810 cc, 810 cd, and 810 ce may be allocated to a chunk server 820 b; and chunk actor 810 af may be allocated to a chunk server 830 c. Chunk server allocation of chunk actors 810 may be based on a number of factors. Chunk actors 810 may be allocated to a chunk server 820 based on their relative locations. For example, chunk actors 810 aa, 810 ab, 810 ba, and 810 bb may be allocated to a chunk server 820 a based on their being adjacent to each other. Such an allocation may be advantageous as it may reduce network traffic and latency as adjacent chunk actors are more likely to communicate with each other than chunk actors 810 which are located far away for each other. Optionally, chunk actors 810 may be allocated to a chunk server 820 based on chunk processing workload and available server processing resources. For example, the processing load of a chunk actor 810 may be determined based on the number of entities comprised within its chunk or region. Based on such a determination, chunk actors 810 may be allocated to a chunk server 820 until a predetermined indication of server load is achieved. In such a scenario, chunk actors 810 (i.e., 810 ac, 810 ad, 810 ae, 810 bc, 810 bd, 810 be, 810 cc, 810 cd, and 810 ce) may be allocated to a chunk server 820 b until chunk server 820 b reaches a predetermined server load value. In yet other examples, each chunk server 820 may be allocated a predetermined number of chunk actors. For example, chunk server 820 c may be allocated one chunk actor 810 (i.e., 810 af.)

As a spatially-optimized simulation 800 progresses, the location and quantity of entities represented within the simulated world may change. As shown in FIG. 8B, the chunks or regions assigned to chunk actors 850 a-850 n may change in size, shape, and quantity as needed based on the instantaneous state of the spatially-optimized simulation 800. Optionally, chunk actor 850 may be assigned to a portion of a spatially-optimized simulated world 800 based on the location, quantity, and density of entities within the assigned chunk. For example, the size of a chunk assigned to chunk actor 850 may be reduced as the number of entities migrating to the assigned chunk increases. For example, the chunks assigned to chunk actors 850 f and 850 g may comprise a higher density of entities than the chunks assigned to chunk actor 850 d. In other examples, the size and shape of a chunk region may be determined based on the workload associated with the entities located within the chunk region. For example, the processing load, or another value indicative of the workload, of a chunk actor 850 may be determined based on the number and/or type of entities and components comprised within its chunk or region. Based on such a determination, the size and shape of a chunk or region allocated to chunk actors 850 may be adjusted until a predetermined indication of workload is achieved. In yet other examples, the size, shape, and quantity of the chunks assigned to chunk actors 850 may remain unchanged as the spatially-optimized simulation 800 progresses. For example, chunk actors and their assigned regions may remain as shown in FIG. 8A. Server allocation of chunk actors 850 may also vary (not shown) based on similar factors as those discussed in detail above with reference to FIG. 8A.

Additionally, chunk actors may be logically grouped into chunk actor layers. FIG. 8C illustrates one example of a spatially-optimized simulated world comprising chunk actor layers 870, 880, and 890. The spatially-optimized simulated world illustrated in FIG. 8C may be similar to the spatially-optimized simulated world illustrated in FIGS. 8A-8B. Each chunk actor layer (e.g., 870, 880, and 890) may comprise one or more chunk actors. For example, chunk actor layer 870 may comprise chunk actors 871 a-871 m, chunk actor layer 880 may comprise chunk actors 881 a-881 m, and chunk actor layer 890 may comprise chunk actors 891 aa-891 gg. Those of skill in the art will appreciate that chunk actors 871, 881, and 891 may be grouped into any number of chunk actor layers and that each chunk actor layer may comprise different amounts of chunk actors and that the number of chunk actors comprised in each layer may vary as spatially-optimized simulation progresses, as described in detail above. Chunk actor layers 870, 880, and 890 may overlap each other and share at least a portion of the spatially-optimized simulated world. For example, as shown in FIG. 8C, chunk actor layers 870, 880, 890 cover and share all regions defined by the spatially-optimized simulated world 800. In this example, there may be three chunk actors (or two or one) for the same region of the virtual world.

Chunk actors 871, 881, and 891 may be organized into one or more chunk actor layers (e.g., 870, 880, and 890) based on one more criteria. Optionally, a chunk actor layer (e.g., 870, 880, and 890) may comprise chunk actors (e.g., 810, 850, 871, 881, and 891) which may be configured to store the canonical data of one particular type of component in the spatially-optimized simulated world. For example, chunk actor layer 870 may comprise chunk actors 871 a-871 m which may store the properties and state information for component A 421 and 431 as illustrated in FIG. 4. Similarly, chunk actor layer 880 may comprise chunk actors 881 a-881 m which may store the properties and state information for component B 422 as illustrated in FIG. 4. Spatially-optimized simulated world 800 may comprise one chunk actor layer (e.g., 870, 880, and 890) for every component type (e.g., 421-423, 432-433, and 441) comprised in the spatially-optimized simulated world 800.

Optionally, a chunk actor layer (e.g., 870, 880, and 890) may comprise chunk actors (e.g., 810, 850, 871, 881, and 891) which may comprise entities of similar size. For example, chunk actor layer 890 may comprise chunk actors 891 which may manage entities which may be small in size. Chunk actor layer 880 may comprise chunk actors 881 which may manage entities which may be generally larger than the entities in chunk actor layer 890. Additionally, chunk actor layer 880 may comprise a coarse-grained representation of the entities comprised by chunk actor layer 890. Chunk actor layer 870 may comprise chunk actors 871 which may manage entities which may be generally larger than the entities in chunk actor layer 880. Additionally, chunk actor layer 870 may comprise a coarse-grained representation of the entities comprised by chunk actor layer 880.

In yet other examples, chunk actors (e.g., 810, 850, 871, 881, and 891) may be grouped into chunk actor layers (e.g., 870, 880, and 890) based on the importance of the entities comprised by the chunk actors. For example, entities with higher importance may be grouped into higher level layers. Optionally, the spatially-optimized simulated world 800 may comprise a single chunk actor layer which may comprise all chunk actors. In such a scenario, each chunk actor may be responsible for all entities located within the region monitored by the chunk actor.

A chunk actor (810, 850, 871, 881, and 891) may monitor a set of entities which are assigned to the chunk actor and determine that an entity may need to be transferred to another chunk. For example, an entity may need to be migrated to a second chunk actor if or when the entity has moved to a region assigned to the second chunk actor. The chunk actor (810, 850, 871, 881, and 891) may determine the second chunk actor based on the current position of the entity. For example, a chunk actor (810, 850, 871, 881, and 891) may use an algorithm or mathematical expression to map the entity's position to a chunk actor region. Alternatively or additionally, the chunk actor may obtain a mapping of the entity's position. For example, snapshot 326 may comprise a map of the chunk actors in the spatially-optimized simulated world 800 and chunk actor (810, 850, 871, 881, and 891) may obtain the map to determine the identity of the second chunk actor using the current position of the entity. In another example, the spatially-optimized simulated world 800 may comprise a distributed hashtable or distributed data structure which may maintain a mapping from a position in the spatially-optimized simulated world 800 to its corresponding chunk actor. The chunk actor (810, 850, 871, 881, and 891) may query the distributed data structure and may obtain an indication of the second chunk actor.

An entity (or software simulating or representing an entity) may monitor its position or other attributes within the spatially-optimized simulated world 800 and determine whether it needs to migrate from its current chunk to another chunk. For example, an entity may change position from within the chunk of a first chunk actor (810, 850, 871, 881, and 891) to the chunk assigned to a second chunk actor (810, 850, 871, 881, and 891.) The entity may determine the second chunk actor based on the current position of the entity. For example, the entity may use an algorithm or mathematical expression to map the entity's position to a chunk actor region. Alternatively or additionally, the entity may obtain a mapping of the entity's position. For example, the entity may obtain the mapping from snapshot 326 or, in another example, the entity may obtain the mapping from a distributed hashtable or distributed data structure. If or when an entity determines the need to migrate to a second chunk actor, then the entity may notify its current chunk actor and request to be migrated to the second chunk actor.

A first chunk actor may migrate an entity to a second chunk actor by communicating directly, in a peer-to-peer fashion, with the second chunk actor. The first chunk actor may forward the entity's state information to the second chunk actor and the second chuck actor may start monitoring and receiving state change notifications for the migrated entity. The first chunk actor may also stop monitoring and receiving state change notifications from the migrated entity.

A chunk actor (810, 850, 871, 881, and 891) may monitor and receive state change notifications from all assigned components for all the entities located within its corresponding chunk. The chunk actor (810, 850, 870, 880, and 890) may store the states of the assigned components in the local memory of the chunk server 820 allocated to the chunk actor for access during execution of the spatially-optimized simulation. In some examples, the states of the assigned components may be stored in cloud-based data store 320 as part of a snapshot 326 and thus may be persisted across simulation runs. The snapshot 326 may also be used to restore a chunk server 320 if or when the chunk server 320 has terminated unexpectedly.

The rate at which components emit state change notifications and the rate at which the state changes are stored may be determined by one of a multiple of data policies implemented by the chunk actor (810, 850, 871, 881, and 891.) State change notifications may be emitted based on the distance between the emitting and the receiving entities. If or when the receiving entity is a large distance away from the emitting entity, the emitting entity may publish state changes at a slower rate. Additionally, the emitting entity may reduce the period of time between state change notifications if or when the receiving entity is closer. In such a scenario, the emitting entity may calculate or determine the state at the same rate; the calculation rate may be unaffected by the distance changes. Thus, allowing an entity to publish state changes at varying rates to multiple receiving entities.

The publishing rate may be determined based on overlap of interest regions. FIG. 9 illustrates one example of a representation of the interest region of a worker that may be implemented according to one or more illustrative embodiments of the disclosure. Interest regions A, B, C, and D (i.e., 910 a-910 d) may represent the interest regions for workers A, B, C, and D (not shown), respectively, within a spatially-optimized simulated world 900. Workers A, B, C, and D may incorporate and/or otherwise include one or more aspects of worker 560 illustrated in FIGS. 5-7. Although FIG. 9 illustrates interest regions 910 using two dimensions, those of skill in the art will appreciate that interest regions may comprise up to as many dimensions as are simulated by the spatially-optimized simulated world. For example, interest regions 910 may comprise three dimensions in a 3D simulated world.

An interest region may overlap with one or more other interest regions. As shown in FIG. 9, interest region A 910 a may overlap with interest region B 910 b in regions 930 a, with interest region C 910 c in region 930 d, and with interest region D 910 d in region 930 e. Similarly, interest region B 910 b may overlap with interest region C 910 c in region 930 c. Interest regions A, B, and C (i.e., 910 a-910 c) may all overlap in region 930 b. Regions 920 a-920 d may indicate regions with no overlap. In other examples, not shown, various interest regions may overlap or not in various other combinations.

An entity (e.g., 940 a-940 c) may publish (or have published on its behalf) state change notifications at a low rate if or when the entity is located within a portion of its authoritative worker's interest region that does not overlap with any other worker's interest region. For example, entity 940 a may publish state change notifications at a slower rate if or when it may be located within region 920 a. An entity (e.g., 940 a-940 c) may publish state change notifications at a medium rate if or when the entity is located within a portion of its authoritative worker's interest region that does overlap with any other worker's interest region. For example, entity 940 c may publish state change notifications at a normal rate if or when it may be located within region 930 e. An entity (e.g., 940 a-940 c) may publish state change notifications at a high rate if or when the entity is located within a portion of its authoritative worker's interest region that does overlap with two or more other worker's interest region. For example, entity 940 b (or a worker) may publish state change notifications at a higher rate if or when it may be located within region 930 b.

Alternatively, an entity may implement multiple separate components which publish their properties at different rates. For example, a vehicle entity may implement a high-fidelity position component that publishes the vehicle's position at a high rate, and a second low-fidelity position component that publishes the vehicle's position at a low rate. Other entities may choose to monitor either the high-fidelity or low-fidelity component.

FIG. 10 illustrates another example of a representation of the interest region of a worker that may be implemented according to one or more illustrative embodiments of the disclosure. Interest regions A, B, C, and D (i.e., 910 a-910 d) may represent the interest regions for workers A, B, C, and D (not shown), respectively, within a spatially-optimized simulated world 900. Workers A, B, C, and D may incorporate and/or otherwise include one or more aspects of worker 560 illustrated in FIGS. 5-7 and 9. Although FIG. 10 illustrates interest regions 910 using two dimensions, those of skill in the art will appreciate that interest regions may comprise up to as many dimensions as are simulated by the spatially-optimized simulated world. For example, interest regions 910 may comprise three dimensions in a 3D simulated world.

Optionally, a worker process (e.g., 560, workers A, B, C, and D) may periodically determine a load metric. The load metric may be a value indicative of the instantaneous workload on the worker process and its ability to perform additional simulation computation work. For example, a load metric may consist of a value between 0 and 1 where a value of 1 may indicate a worker which is unable to accept additional work. A worker process (e.g., 560, workers A, B, C, and D) may periodically transmit its load metric to chunk actor(s) responsible for the chunk region(s) covered by the worker's interest region. A worker process (e.g., 560, workers A, B, C, and D) may periodically calculate a load density center (e.g., 1050 a-1050 d). The load density centers 1050 may represent a center of mass for interest region 910 wherein the “mass” relates to the computation workload of the worker process (e.g., 560, workers A, B, C, and D.) For example, interest region 910 a may comprise a load density center 1050 a based on the location, quantity, and processing load of the entities and components assigned to worker A. Load density centers 1050 need not be in a geometric center of interest regions 910. Worker processes (e.g., 560, workers A, B, C, and D) may update the location of their respective load density centers 1050 as spatially-optimized simulation 900 progresses and the location, quantity, density, and processing load requirements of the entities in the simulation 900 change. Load density may also be described as the processing requirement needed to simulate or represent a unit of space, area or other portion of the virtual simulation or world. A load density center may also be described as a mean position of computational requirements for a particular body, or portion of the virtual simulation or world, for example.

A chunk actor (e.g., 810, 850, 871, 881, and 891) may monitor the load metrics and load density centers reported by the workers within its chunk region. Based on the monitoring, a chunk actor may determine whether a worker may be at or over maximum processing capacity. Based on the determination, the chunk actor may attempt to reduce the worker's processing workload. In one example, the chunk actor may remove delegation authority for one or more entities from the worker process, which may reduce the worker's load metric and may shrink the worker's interest region. The chunk actor may then move the delegation authority of the one or more entities to one or more other worker processes. For example, referring to FIG. 10, a chunk actor (not shown) may determine to move entity 940 a (or other entity) from worker A to either worker B, worker C, or worker D based on a load balancing algorithm. Based on the monitoring, a chunk actor may alternatively determine whether a worker process may be at or under a minimum processing capacity. Based on the determination, the chunk actor may move all entities currently assigned to the respective worker process to another worker process based on the load balancing algorithm.

Based on the load balancing algorithm, a chunk actor may determine one or more candidate worker processes which may receive delegation authority of the one or more entities being removed from the overloaded worker process. A chunk actor may determine an initial list of candidate worker processes based on the workers which receive notifications from the overloaded worker. For example, an initial list of candidate worker processes may comprise worker processes whose interest regions overlap with the interest region of the overloaded worker. For example, workers B, C, and D may comprise an initial list of candidates for worker A, as shown in FIG. 10. A chunk actor may remove candidate worker processes from the initial list if or when a candidate worker process may be reporting a load metric that is above a predetermined threshold. Optionally, a chunk actor may be configured to determine a tensile energy for each of the one or more entities being migrated. A chunk actor may determine the tensile energy U of an entity with respect to a worker process based on a distance x (e.g., 1060 a-1060 c) between the entity (e.g., 940 a) and the load density center 1050 of the respective worker and a spring constant, K (e.g., U=½ Kx²). For example, a chunk actor determining to migrate entity 940 a may determine a first energy between entity 940 a and worker B based on distance 1060 a and spring constant K. The chunk actor may determine a second energy between entity 940 a and worker C based on distance 1060 b and spring constant K, and a third energy between entity 940 a and worker D based on distance 1060 c and spring constant K. The chunk actor may compare all of the calculated energies and determine a receiving worker which minimizes the energy between the entity and the receiving worker process. Spring constant K may be a predetermined value which may remain unchanged as the spatially-optimized simulation 900 progresses. In other scenarios, spring constant K may change as time progresses or based on other parameters.

In other examples, a worker process (e.g., 560, workers A, B, C, and D) may periodically relocate its interest region based on a determination of an average position of all the entities for which the worker is authoritative. For example, a worker process may move the center of its interest region (or otherwise have it moved) to the average position of all the entities for which the worker process is authoritative. Additionally, the worker process may be configured to increase or reduce in size its interest region based on its current load metric. For example, a worker process may increase a maximum simulation radius of its interest region if or when the current load metric decreases. Similarly, a worker process may decrease a maximum simulation radius of its interest region if or when the current load metric increases. In such a scenario, a chunk actor may determine a receiving worker based on the distance between the entity (e.g., 940 a) and the center of the interest region of the respective worker and whether the entity is within the maximum simulation radius for the receiving worker. In yet other examples, the number and position of worker processes may remain unchanged throughout the simulation and a chunk actor may determine a receiving worker for an entity based on the location of the entity and which worker process is located closest to the entity.

A chunk actor (810, 850, 871, 881, and 891) may assign a worker process to all components of the same type comprised by the entities assigned to the chunk actor. In this manner, a worker process may simulate all the components of a certain type or all the components within a chunk region. A chunk actor (810, 850, 871, 881, and 891) may comprise multiple worker processes which may be authoritative for several entities within the chunk region.

Alternatively, the chunk actor may determine that all candidate worker processes have a load metric above the predetermined threshold. For example, a chunk actor determining to migrate entity 940 a from worker A may determine that worker B, worker C, and worker D all have a load metric above the predetermined threshold. In such a scenario, the chunk actor may be configured to cause a new worker process to be instantiated and component delegation may be transferred to the newly created worker process.

A chunk actor may be further configured to utilize one of the load balancing algorithms described in detail above if or when a worker process terminates unexpectedly. For example, as described above, a worker process may cease to transmit a heartbeat signal periodically. In such a scenario, a chunk actor may migrate the entities and components which had their write authority delegated to the terminated worker process to other pre-existing worker processes. Alternatively, the chunk actor may replace the terminated worker process with a newly instantiated worker process which may have been restored using the persisted snapshot data.

Similarly, a chunk actor may be configured to utilize one of the load balancing algorithms described in detail above to assign a worker process to a newly instantiated entity. For example, entity 940 b may be a newly instantiated entity and the chunk actor may utilize a load balancing algorithm to which worker process to assign the components comprised by entity 940 b. In the event that the chunk actor is unable to identify a worker process within its assigned region to assign to the newly instantiated entity, the chunk actor may attempt to assign the newly instantiated entity based on a local cache of known worker processes. For example, the chunk actor may maintain a local cache of known worker processes with which the chunk actor has communicated recently or within a predetermined period of time. Alternatively or additionally, the chunk actor may cause a new worker process to be instantiated and assigned to the newly instantiated entity.

Optionally, every entity in the spatially-optimized simulated world 900 may be configured to periodically utilize one of the load balancing algorithms described in detail above to determine whether to migrate one or more of its components to different worker process. Based on the determination and in order to effectuate the load balancing algorithm, the entity may be configured to cause a migration of the component delegation from the current worker process to another worker process.

Advantageously, and as illustrated in greater detail above, a spatially-optimized simulation development environment may automatically balance and distribute the workload across the available resources in a manner that minimizes the total amount of workers needed to perform the simulation. In addition, the spatially-optimized simulation development environment may automatically grow or shrink and move swarms of worker processes executing over possibly thousands of machines, based on the run-time workload needs of the simulation and the current location of the entities within the simulation. Furthermore, the spatially-optimized simulation development environment may dynamically recover from failures by using continuous persistence of state data and monitoring of worker process health.

FIG. 11 shows a high-level architecture of an illustrative spatially-optimized simulation development environment. As shown in FIG. 11, client workers 1120 a-1120 c may each communicate with a bridge 1140 a-1140 c. Similarly, server workers 1130 a-1130 c may each communicate with a bridge 1140 d-1140 f. Client workers 1120 and server workers 1130 may incorporate and/or otherwise include one or more aspects of worker 560 as illustrated in FIGS. 5-7, and workers A, B, C, and D as illustrated in FIGS. 9-10. Client worker 1120 a may execute within a client computing device 1110 a; client worker 1120 b may execute within a client computing device 1110 b; and, client worker 1120 c may execute within a client computing device 1110 c. Client computing devices 1110 a-1110 d may incorporate and/or otherwise include one or more aspects of client computing devices 340 as illustrated in FIG. 3. Computing devices 1110 f-1110 j may comprise a server such as the server illustrated in FIGS. 2-3 (e.g., 240 a-240 n, 202 a-2020, as well as other systems having different architectures (e.g. all or part of FIG. 1.)

Bridges 1140 a-1140 f (generally 1140) may communicate with one or more chunk actors 1150 a-1150 d (generally 1150) in spatially-optimized simulation environment 1100. Bridges 1140 may incorporate and/or otherwise include one or more aspects of bridge 610 as illustrated in FIGS. 6-7. Bridges 1140 may also communicate with each other. Chunk actors 1150 may incorporate and/or otherwise include one or more aspects of chunk actors 810, 850, 871, 881, and 891 as illustrated in FIGS. 8A-8C.

Optionally, spatially-optimized simulation environment 1100 may comprise a receptionist module 1160. The receptionist 1160 may provide a well-known or predetermined network address. A client worker 1120 initially connecting to spatially-optimized simulation environment 1100 may connect to the receptionist module 1160 via the well-known address. The receptionist 1160 may receive a request to connect from a client worker 1120. In response to the connection request, the receptionist 1160 may determine a server 1110 d-1110 g in which to instantiate a bridge instance 1140 assigned to client worker 1120. For example, receptionist 1160 may base the server determination on one of the load balancing algorithms described in detail above. In such a scenario, the receptionist 1160 may utilize a load balancing algorithm to assign a server 1110 to client worker 1120. In another example, receptionist 1160 may maintain a coarse grain understanding of the interest region of each server 1110 d-1110 g in the spatially-optimized simulation environment 1100. In such a scenario, receptionist 1160 may base the server determination on the coarse grain understanding. In yet another example, each server 1110 d-1110 g may periodically determine an average spatial position of all bridge instances 1140 executing within the server 1110. In such a scenario, receptionist 1160 may assign a server 1110 to client worker 1120 based on a comparison of the server's average spatial position with the proposed spatial position of client worker 1120.

As spatially-optimized simulation 1100 progresses, bridge 1140 a may be designated to be migrated from server 1110 d to server 1110 e based on a determination based on the load balancing algorithm described in detail above. In such a scenario, a new bridge instance 1140 g (not shown) may be instantiated in server 1110 e and client worker 1120 a may be temporarily connected to both bridge 1140 a and 1140 g while the bridge migration is effectuated. Once the migration is completed, client worker 1120 a may be disconnected from bridge 1140 a and bridge 1140 may be terminated. In another example, bridge 1140 d and server worker 1130 a may be designated to be migrated from server 1110 f to server 1110 g. In that scenario, a new bridge instance 1140 h (not shown) and a new server worker instance 1130 d (not shown) may be instantiated in server 1110 g. Server workers 1130 a and 1130 d may be temporarily connected to bridges 1140 d and 1140 h while the bridge migration is effectuated. Once the migration is completed, server worker 1130 d may be disconnected from bridge 1140 d and bridge 1140 d and server worker 1130 a may be terminated. Alternatively or additionally, bridge 1140 d and server worker 1130 a may be terminated in server 1110 f and restored on server 1110 g using the persisted state data in snapshot 326.

Optionally, spatially-optimized simulation environment 1100 may comprise one oracle module 1170. In yet other examples, spatially-optimized simulation environment 1100 may comprise one oracle module 1170 for each virtual server cluster as described in detail above in reference to FIG. 2. An oracle module 1170 may comprise and maintain a workers database 1172 and a bridges database 1174. The workers database 1172 may comprise data indicative of all worker instances 1120 and 1130 in a spatially-optimized simulation environment 1100. Similarly, bridges database 1174 may comprise data indicative of all bridge instances 1140 in a spatially-optimized simulation environment 1100. The oracle module 1170 may utilize the data in the workers database 1172 and the bridges database 1174 to respond to requests from a chunk actor 1150 for additional resources. For example, a chunk actor 1150 may be unable to determine a candidate worker process which may receive delegation authority. In such a scenario, chunk actor 1150 may request an additional worker process from oracle module 1170. In response, oracle module 1170 may determine whether a pre-existing worker process may be available to receive the delegation authority or whether a new worker process may need to be instantiated. Based on the determination, oracle module 1170 may respond to chunk actor 1150 with data identifying a preexisting worker process. Alternatively, oracle module 1170 may respond to chunk actor 1150 with an indication that a new worker process may need to be instantiated. The oracle module 1170 may be further configured to utilize the data in the workers database 1172 and the bridges database 1174 to terminate worker instances and bridge instances that are underutilized or unused. For example, oracle module 1170 may terminate a worker instance if or when no components are assigned to the worker instance.

As previously described, workers may transmit commands to other workers, and commands may allow the worker transmitting the command to interact with an entity and/or component for which the worker is not authoritative for. Commands may comprise, for example, asynchronous remote procedure calls (RPCs), and workers may be able to send commands by invoking RPCs that may be serviced on a runtime (e.g., runtime 248) server, or on another worker. In some examples, a worker may want to invoke a command addressed to some part of the system (e.g., runtime 248), and/or some component and/or entity. Another worker may be authoritative over the component and/or entity. The worker desiring to invoke the command may be able to pass parameters to the command and/or receive a response indicating whether the command succeeded or failed. If the command succeeded, the worker may optionally receive a return value.

Commands may be invoked on an endpoint. An endpoint may comprise, for example, a pair of entity ID and component ID. Additionally or alternatively, an endpoint may comprise a special system endpoint for communicating with runtime 248. A particular endpoint may support multiple commands. A command may be identified by a name, which may be encoded on the wire as an integer and/or may be generated by a code generator to make commands named with strings and/or generated methods. In some aspects, commands may be identified on the wire as, for example, strings, enums, namespacing, etc.

As an example, an entity might have a transform component, which may support a command called Teleport. This command might be addressed with the following address:

{ “endpoint”: { “entityId”: 1337, “componentId”: 420 }, “commandName”: “Teleport” }

As another example, the runtime 248 may support a command to spawn an entity. This command might be address as follows:

{ “endpoint”: “SYSTEM”, “commandName”: “SpawnEntity” }

A callee may be identified by an address (e.g., a pair of (endpoint, command name)), while a caller may be a worker and may be identified by, for example, the name of its bridge.

In some aspects, a command may be invoked successfully on another worker. FIG. 12 illustrates a flow chart of a method of transmitting and/or receiving commands according to one or more illustrative aspects described herein. As previously explained, a plurality of workers associated with a computer-based, distributed simulation may be instantiated on one or more computing devices. Each worker may be authoritative over one or more entity components of a plurality of entity components associated with the computer-based simulation. As previously explained, a mapping of entity components to workers may be stored in a database associated with the simulation, such as an in-memory database. As authority changes from one worker to another worker, the mapping in the database may be updated. Also or alternatively, each worker of the plurality of workers may be associated with a bridge of a plurality of bridges. As previously explained, a worker may communicate with the simulation via its associated bridge. FIG. 12 shows a worker 1202 associated with a bridge 1204 and a worker 1210 associated with a bridge 1208. The simulation may also comprise a resolver 1206. As will be described in further detail below, the resolver 1206 may be used to determine the bridge and/or worker to send a command to.

The worker 1202 (e.g., a caller of a command) may determine a command for an entity component of the simulation. If the worker 1202 is authoritative over the entity component, the worker 1202 may invoke the command on the entity component. If, on the other hand, the worker 1202 is not authoritative over the entity component, the worker 1202 may determine to send the command to another worker authoritative over the entity component, such as worker 1210. The worker 1202 might not know the destination of the command (e.g., the identity of the bridge 1208 and/or worker 1210). The worker 1202 may determine a command ID (e.g., an integer or other identifier) to identify a command invocation (e.g., cmdId in FIG. 12). The ID may be unique for the worker 1202. For example, worker 1202 might not pick the same ID twice for two different commands. However, worker 1202 and worker 1210 could both pick the same ID. In step 1232, worker 1202 may send, to its bridge 1204, an operation, such as a request to invoke a command (e.g., InvokeCommand) on the entity component. The operation may comprise the command ID chosen by worker 1202, an address of the command to invoke (e.g., an entity identifier and/or a component identifier, which may comprise an identifier for the entity component), and/or a request payload. The request payload may comprise an arbitrary protobuf. The request payload may comprise any data specified by the user. Such data may be encoded according to a schema used.

The caller's bridge (e.g., bridge 1204) may receive the command invocation from worker 1202. Bridge 1204 may determine, such as by looking up, which bridge is associated with (e.g., responsible for) the endpoint named in the address (e.g., the entity component or other endpoint). For example, in step 1234, the bridge 1204 may transmit, to a resolver 1206, a lookup request comprising the address of the endpoint (e.g., an identifier for the entity component on which to invoke the command). The resolver 1206 may determine, based on a mapping of entity components to workers, that the worker 1210 is authoritative over the entity component and/or the bridge 1208 associated with the worker 1210. For example, the resolver 1206 may use the identifier for the entity component to look up, in the mapping of entity components to workers, the corresponding worker and/or the worker's bridge. In step 1236, the resolver 1206 may respond to bridge 1204 indicating that bridge 1208 is authoritative. The response may comprise, for example, an identifier for the bridge 1208. Bridge 1204 may use this information to determine to send the command to bridge 1208. As previously explained, the mapping of entity components to workers may change, such as when authority over entity components change. Each time the worker 1202 desires to invoke another command on an entity component (e.g., a second command, third command, etc.), the resolver 1206 may use an up-to-date mapping of entity components to workers to determine the appropriate bridge and/or worker to send the command to.

In step 1238, bridge 1204 may send a command invocation to bridge 1208, and the command invocation may comprise the address, the command ID, and/or the payload request. Bridge 1208 may receive the request to invoke the command from bridge 1204. In some examples, bridge 1208 may determine its own new command ID (e.g., cmdId2 in FIG. 12) to talk to its worker 1210. The command ID may be different from the command ID selected by the worker 1202 (e.g., cmdId in FIG. 12). By each bridge-worker pair using different IDs (e.g., each pair using its own sequence of IDs), the use of unique global IDs across the distributed system may be avoided. For example, the sender worker (e.g., worker 1202) may generate the ID for the command request it sends, as previously explained. The sender worker 1202 may later match this ID to a command response received from the sender's bridge (e.g., bridge 1204). The receiver's bridge (e.g., bridge 1208) may generate a new ID (e.g., cmdId2 in FIG. 12) for the command request the receiver's bridge 1208 sends to the receiver worker (e.g., worker 1210). The bridge 1208 may match this ID to the command response received from the receiver worker 1210, as will be explained in further detail below. Alternatively, bridge 1208 may use the same command ID as the worker 1202. In step 1240, the bridge 1208 may send, to worker 1210, a request to invoke the command. The request may comprise, for example, the endpoint address (e.g., an address for the entity component), the request payload, and/or the command ID.

Worker 1210 may receive the invoke command request from bridge 1208 and may process the command, such as by invoking the command on the entity component identified in the request. In step 1242, worker 1210 may send, to bridge 1208, a response to the request to invoke the command. For example, the response may comprise a return operation. The response may comprise a command ID (e.g., the command ID sent by bridge 1208 to worker 1210, such as cmdId2), along with a response payload (e.g., an arbitrary protobuf). The bridge 1208 may receive the response and may match the command ID in the response (e.g., cmdId2) to the command ID determined by the worker 1202 (e.g., cmdId). In step 1244, the bridge 1208 may send a response to the bridge 1204 associated with the worker 1202. The response sent to the bridge 1204 may comprise the command ID determined by the worker 1202 (e.g., cmdId) and/or the response payload. The bridge 1204 may receive the response from the bridge 1208 and, in step 1246, may send, to the worker 1202 the response, which may also comprise the command ID and/or the response payload. In some examples, the response returned to the worker 1202 may indicate that the worker 1210 successfully invoked the command on the entity component. If a command response has been successfully received, then the command request may have been executed on the receiver worker once. In some other scenarios, the command may have been successfully executed or may have failed, but the receiver worker might receive a specific error or a timeout, as will be described in further detail below.

In some aspects, a command might fail on another worker, such as worker 1210. FIG. 13 illustrates another flow chart of a method of transmitting and/or receiving commands according to one or more illustrative aspects described herein. As previously explained, one or more of steps 1232-1240 may be performed to attempt to invoke a command on an entity component authoritative on the worker 1210. If, however, the command fails on worker 1210 (e.g., the callee of the command), the worker 1210 may send, in step 1342, a failure message back to its bridge (e.g., bridge 1208). The failure message may comprise a command ID (e.g., a command ID sent by bridge 1208 to worker 1210, such as cmdId2) and/or an explanation of the failure (e.g., the reason) back to bridge 1208. A failure may include a time out for the command, such as if the worker 1210 took too long to respond to the command. Also or alternatively, the failure may indicate that the command was transmitted during an entity component authority handoff, where there might not be a fixed owner. Also or alternatively, the failure may comprise a user-defined failure case. Other examples of failures will be described in further detail below. The failure message may propagate back to the caller (e.g., worker 1202). For example, the bridge 1208 may send, to the bridge 1204, the response indicating that invocation of the command on the entity component failed. The bridge 1204 may send, to its worker 1202, the response indicating that invocation of the command on the entity component failed.

Failures can occur at any stage in the above-described flows. In a first scenario, bridge 1204 may already have a command in flight from worker 1202 with the same command ID. Bridge 1204 may fail the command with a bad request status. In a second scenario, the resolver 1206 might not know about the endpoint it was asked for. For example, the entity may have been deleted. The resolver 1206 may fail the command with a not found status. Bridge 1204 may propagate the not found status back to worker 1202. In a third scenario, bridge 1208 might not exist, and a temporary error may propagate back to worker 1202. In a fourth scenario, bridge 1208 might not be authoritative for the invoked endpoint when the request arrives. For example, between when bridge 1204 asked the resolver 1206 where to go and the invoke message arriving at bridge 1208, authority may have moved. A temporary error may be generated and propagated back to worker 1202. In a fifth scenario, worker 1210 may have disconnected, and a temporary error may propagate back to worker 1202. In a sixth scenario, any of the messages could be dropped, and a timeout may be generated at some point. In a seventh scenario, any of the messages could take a long time to be delivered, and a timeout may be generated at some point.

Any of the failures or errors described above may be propagated back to the caller (e.g., worker 1202). The failure or error propagated back to the caller may comprise, for example, a status code and/or an explanation of the error. Error codes may comprise RPC error codes or other specialized error codes with well-defined semantics. The caller may make informed decisions as to whether it should retry the command or not. The intermediate components, which may be runtime 248 components, might not retry in response to the failure.

In some aspects, a worker (e.g., worker 1202) may begin a command, but the worker may migrate to a different bridge before the response comes back to the worker. The response message from worker 1210 may be delivered to the new bridge (and not to the old bridge), so worker 1202 might see the response message. If the receiver's bridge (e.g., bridge 1208) already knows about the bridge migration of the sender's bridge (e.g., bridge 1204) when sending the response to the sender worker (e.g., worker 1202), the receiver's bridge may send the response to the new sender bridge. If not, the sender worker (e.g., worker 1202) may time out waiting for the response, which may allow the sender worker (e.g., the user code in the sender worker) to retry. In some aspects, the receiver worker (e.g., worker 1210) may migrate to a new bridge. If the sender's bridge (e.g., bridge 1204) already knows about the bridge migration of the receiver's bridge (e.g., bridge 1208) when sending the request, the sender's bridge may send the command directly to the new receiver bridge. If not, the sender worker (e.g., worker 1202) may be notified of the bridge migration, and the sender worker may re-send the request. Additionally or alternatively, the system may attempt to forward the command request to the new bridge.

In some aspects, a worker (e.g., worker 1210) may begin to service a command for an entity and/or component C, but authority for entity and/or component C may move to a different worker before the command completes. In this case, the caller (e.g., worker 1202) may see some kind of variant on command failed and may decide to retry or not based on the nature of the command being invoked.

In some aspects, if worker 1202 invokes a command, at most one worker might receive an invoke command message for the call. If worker 1202 receives a successful response, the command may have succeeded.

Various other scenarios may exist. If worker 1202 receives a response indicating that the command failed, the command may have actually succeeded. If worker 1202 does not receive any response at all (e.g., a timeout happens on worker 1202), the command may have succeeded or failed. If worker 1202 invokes two commands concurrently on the same address (e.g., entity, component pair), they may return in any order. For example, worker 1202 may invoke command C1 followed by command C2. Before command C1 returns, worker 1202 may receive a response for command C2 before receiving a response for command C1. A user code or core library may implement a built-in mechanism for attempting to provide exactly-once or idempotent command invocations. For example, a system service for generating tickets may be used.

In some examples described herein, the source of a command may be the worker that invoked the command and not a component on an entity. Workers generating the commands may provide some benefits. For example, if the source of a command is a component, workers that are not authoritative on any components or entities might not be able to invoke commands. A worker that did not invoke a command (but receives a response for the command) might be surprised. For example, some other worker who used to be authoritative on an entity that the new worker is now authoritative for may have invoked some command at some point in the past. Workers generating commands may allow recovering the same or similar semantics in user code on a per-method basis by introducing a transaction journal in the entity's states and making the relevant command idempotent (e.g., using the ticketing pattern). This is so that the command may be freely retried if authority moves between workers while a command is in flight. The newly authoritative worker may detect this condition by replaying the transaction log in the entity's state.

Various use cases for commands will now be described.

Client connection and player spawning: A player may connect to a world (e.g., a game world) by launching a client program on the player's local machine. When the client connects to the world as a worker (e.g., via the Internet), the client (e.g., a worker) may want to have a player spawned, even if the client worker does not have the permission or authority to create entities to represent the player in the world. Instead, the client worker may send a command to another worker running on the server-side to spawn an entity on behalf of the player. The worker running on the server side, which may be a player creator worker, may be authoritative for a player connection component. The player creator worker may comprise trusted code and may determine the right kind of player to be spawned (e.g., having the correct inventory, experience points, etc.).

Flammability: two (or more) workers of the same type may be authoritative over a forest of trees. Each tree may have a flammability component. When one tree sets on fire (e.g., the tree's flammability component is_on_fire becomes true), the tree may attempt to ignite other trees nearby. As there may be many workers simulating a whole forest of trees, with each other simulating a plurality of trees each, there may come a time where a tree on worker A may want to ignite a tree on worker B. By defining an ignite( ) command on the flammability component, the worker may be able to send a command to the other worker to ignite the tree, continuing the fire propagation.

Other action-at-distance simulations may use similar commands. For example, game artificial intelligence may control the behavior of a non-player character (e.g., a monster). An AI with AI components authoritative on one worker shooting another AI having its AI components authoritative on another worker.

A code example from a simulation demo introduces a concept of flammability to entities in a simulation (e.g., a game world). The simulation runtime may execute this code across a plurality of workers simultaneously, allowing flammability behavior to run across a large number of entities and to be visualized by many connected clients simultaneously.

An illustrative simulation schema is as follows:

// The simulation system schema language may let you define cross-language // components, that can be implemented and visualized across a // variety of languages and integrations component Flammability { id = 1000; // This property may define a persistent state of this entity potentially being on fire bool is_on_fire = 1; // Commands may provide a way of workers interacting with other workers. // These workers may be written in different languages command Nothing ignite(IgniteRequest); } type IgniteRequest { // could contain additional parameters }

One or more server workers may run the following code to implement flammability:

// May be added to game objects that exist on server worker. // Potentially hundreds of server workers could be running in the same world. class PropagateFlamesBehaviour : MonoBehaviour { // FlammabilityWriter may be code generated for you // using a simulation system schema compiler, and injected [Require] private Flammability.Writer flammabilityWriter; void OnEnable( ) { // Set up a handler for when we get an Ignite command flammabilityWriter.CommandReceiver.OnIgnite.RegisterResponse(HandleIgnite); } // When the trigger around the flaming game object intersects another entity void OnTriggerEnter(Collider other) { if (flammabilityWriter.Data.isOnFire) { // Simulation commands may route to whichever worker is simulating // this component. Simulation.Commands.SendCommand(flammabilityWriter, Flammability.Commands.Ignite.Descriptor, new IgniteRequest( ), other.gameObject.EntityId( )); } } private Nothing HandleIgnite(Nothing request, ICommandCallerInfo callerinfo) { if (!flammabilityWriter.Data.isOnFire) {  flammabilityWriter.Send(new Flammable.Update( ).SetIsOnFire(true)); } return new Nothing( ); } void OnDisable( ) { flammabilityWriter.CommandReceiver.OnIgnite.DeregisterResponse( ); } }

One or more client workers may run the following code to implement flammability:

// May be added to game objects that exist on client worker. // Arbitrarily many clients may be running this code class FlamesVisualizer : MonoBehaviour { // FlammabilityReader may be code generated for you // using simulation system schema compiler, and injected [Require] private Flammability.Reader flammabilityReader; // This may reference a particle system on the game object public ParticleSystem particles; void OnEnable( ) { // Re-visualize when we are set on fire flammabilityReader.IsOnFireUpdated.Add(UpdateVisualization); UpdateVisualization(flammabilityReader.Data.isOnFire); } void UpdateVisualization(bool isOnFire) { // Enable the particle system as appropriate if (isOnFire) { particles.Start( ); } else { particles.Stop( ); } } }

Whilst the embodiments and aspects have been described in relation to virtual hardware servers, the methods and systems may also be used with other hardware or servers including local or physical servers.

Although the subject matter has been described in language specific to structural features and/or methodological acts, it is to be understood that the subject matter defined in the appended claims is not necessarily limited to the specific features or acts described above. Rather, the specific features and acts described above are described as example implementations of the following claims. 

What is claimed is:
 1. A method comprising: instantiating, on one or more computing devices, a plurality of workers associated with a computer-based simulation, wherein each worker of the plurality of workers is authoritative over one or more entity components of a plurality of entity components associated with the computer-based simulation, and wherein each worker of the plurality of workers is associated with a bridge of a plurality of bridges; determining, by a first worker of the plurality of workers, a command for an entity component of the plurality of entity components, wherein a second worker of the plurality of workers is authoritative over the entity component; determining, based on a mapping of entity components to workers, a bridge associated with the second worker; transmitting, via a bridge associated with the first worker and via the bridge associated with the second worker, a request to invoke the command on the entity component; and receiving, by the first worker, from the second worker, and via the bridge associated with the second worker, a response to the request to invoke the command.
 2. The method of claim 1, further comprising: determining, by the first worker of the plurality of workers, an identifier for the command for the entity component, wherein the request to invoke the command comprises the identifier for the command and a payload for the command.
 3. The method of claim 2, wherein the identifier for the command comprises a first identifier for the command, the method further comprising: determining, by the bridge associated with the second worker, a second identifier for the command for the entity component, wherein the second identifier is different from the first identifier.
 4. The method of claim 3, wherein receiving the response to the request to invoke the command comprises receiving the second identifier for the command.
 5. The method of claim 1, further comprising: after determining the command, transmitting, by the first worker and to the bridge associated with the first worker, a request to invoke the command on the entity component, wherein the request to invoke the command transmitted to the bridge associated with the first worker comprises an identifier for the entity component, wherein determining the bridge associated with the second worker comprises determining, based on the identifier for the entity component and based on the mapping of entity components to workers, the bridge associated with the second worker.
 6. The method of claim 5, wherein determining the bridge associated with the second worker comprises: transmitting, by the bridge associated with the first worker and to a resolver associated with the computer-based simulation, a lookup request comprising the identifier for the entity component; and based on transmitting the lookup request, receiving, by the bridge associated with the first worker and from the resolver, an identifier for the bridge associated with the second worker, and wherein transmitting the request to invoke the command on the entity component comprises transmitting, by the bridge associated with the first worker and to the bridge associated with the second worker, the request to invoke the command on the entity component.
 7. The method of claim 1, further comprising: assigning authority over the entity component from the second worker to a third worker of the plurality of workers; determining, by the first worker, a second command for the entity component; determining, based on the mapping of entity components to workers, a bridge associated with the third worker; and transmitting, via the bridge associated with the third worker, a request to invoke the second command on the entity component.
 8. The method of claim 1, wherein the response to the request to invoke the command comprises an indication that invocation of the command on the entity component failed.
 9. The method of claim 8, wherein the response to the request to invoke the command indicates one or more of a time out for the command, that the command was transmitted during an entity component authority handoff, or that a user-defined failure occurred.
 10. The method of claim 1, further comprising: storing, by a computing device of the one or more computing devices and in a database associated with the computer-based simulation, the mapping of entity components to workers, wherein determining the bridge associated with the second worker comprises determining, based on the mapping of entity components to workers stored in the database, the bridge associated with the second worker.
 11. One or more non-transitory computer readable media storing computer executable instructions that, when executed, cause a system to perform a computer-based simulation by: instantiating, on one or more computing devices, a plurality of workers associated with the computer-based simulation, wherein each worker of the plurality of workers is authoritative over one or more entity components of a plurality of entity components associated with the computer-based simulation, and wherein each worker of the plurality of workers is associated with a bridge of a plurality of bridges; determining, by a first worker of the plurality of workers, a command for an entity component of the plurality of entity components, wherein a second worker of the plurality of workers is authoritative over the entity component; determining, based on a mapping of entity components to workers, a bridge associated with the second worker; transmitting, via a bridge associated with the first worker and via the bridge associated with the second worker, a request to invoke the command on the entity component; and receiving, by the first worker, from the second worker, and via the bridge associated with the second worker, a response to the request to invoke the command.
 12. The one or more non-transitory computer readable media of claim 11, storing computer executable instructions that, when executed, cause the system to perform the computer-based simulation by: determining, by the first worker of the plurality of workers, an identifier for the command for the entity component, wherein the request to invoke the command comprises the identifier for the command and a payload for the command.
 13. The one or more non-transitory computer readable media of claim 12, wherein the identifier for the command comprises a first identifier for the command, the one or more non-transitory computer readable media storing computer executable instructions that, when executed, cause the system to perform the computer-based simulation by: determining, by the bridge associated with the second worker, a second identifier for the command for the entity component, wherein the second identifier is different from the first identifier.
 14. The one or more non-transitory computer readable media of claim 13, wherein receiving the response to the request to invoke the command comprises receiving the second identifier for the command.
 15. A system comprising: one or more computing devices; and memory storing computer-executable instructions that, when executed by the one or more computing devices, cause the system to: instantiate, on the one or more computing devices, a plurality of workers associated with a computer-based simulation, wherein each worker of the plurality of workers is authoritative over one or more entity components of a plurality of entity components associated with the computer-based simulation, and wherein each worker of the plurality of workers is associated with a bridge of a plurality of bridges; determine, by a first worker of the plurality of workers, a command for an entity component of the plurality of entity components, wherein a second worker of the plurality of workers is authoritative over the entity component; determine, based on a mapping of entity components to workers, a bridge associated with the second worker; transmit, via a bridge associated with the first worker and via the bridge associated with the second worker, a request to invoke the command on the entity component; and receive, by the first worker, from the second worker, and via the bridge associated with the second worker, a response to the request to invoke the command.
 16. The system of claim 15, wherein the memory stores computer-executable instructions that, when executed by the one or more computing devices, cause the system to: after determining the command, transmit, by the first worker and to the bridge associated with the first worker, a request to invoke the command on the entity component, wherein the request to invoke the command transmitted to the bridge associated with the first worker comprises an identifier for the entity component, wherein determining the bridge associated with the second worker comprises determining, based on the identifier for the entity component and based on the mapping of entity components to workers, the bridge associated with the second worker.
 17. The system of claim 16, wherein determining the bridge associated with the second worker comprises: transmitting, by the bridge associated with the first worker and to a resolver associated with the computer-based simulation, a lookup request comprising the identifier for the entity component; and based on transmitting the lookup request, receiving, by the bridge associated with the first worker and from the resolver, an identifier for the bridge associated with the second worker, and wherein transmitting the request to invoke the command on the entity component comprises transmitting, by the bridge associated with the first worker and to the bridge associated with the second worker, the request to invoke the command on the entity component.
 18. The system of claim 15, wherein the memory stores computer-executable instructions that, when executed by the one or more computing devices, cause the system to: assign authority over the entity component from the second worker to a third worker of the plurality of workers; determine, by the first worker, a second command for the entity component; determine, based on the mapping of entity components to workers, a bridge associated with the third worker; and transmit, via the bridge associated with the third worker, a request to invoke the second command on the entity component.
 19. The system of claim 15, wherein the response to the request to invoke the command comprises an indication that invocation of the command on the entity component failed.
 20. The system of claim 19, wherein the response to the request to invoke the command indicates one or more of a time out for the command, that the command was transmitted during an entity component authority handoff, or that a user-defined failure occurred. 